This report is a detailed research project exposing the use of government documents as a tool of subjugation. The report covers the history of birth, marriage and death documents used in the land known as 'Montana country, and more'.

The December 2013 issue of Harvard Law Review is dedicated to the late Ronald Dworkin, with In Memoriam essays. The issue has an article by David Pozen, "The Leaky Leviathan: Why the Government Condemns and Condones Unlawful Disclosures of Information." The issue adds essays by Nicola Lacey and Geoffrey Shaw examining a previously lost writing by H.L.A. Hart on discretion, and Hart's own essay.

Music to Everyone's Ears provides an analysis of U.S. copyright law, musical characteristics commonly considered in copyright disputes, judge's approaches to music copyright litigation, and the role alternative dispute resolution can play in music rights disputes.

Jurisprudence. Philosophy of Law.This book looks at Uncertainty of Law and Constitutional Government: Law and Mathematics and Science; Godel's Incompleteness Theorem; Nashe's Optimal Game Theory; Art of Matched Filters, as introduction to the series entitled Philosophy of Law published by Smashwords

Jurisprudence. Philosophy of Law. Uncertainty of Law and Constitutional Government. This book looks at Prospects for Constitutional Government: War and Peace; Limited Government and Individual Rights; Pax Americana; Wealth and Change; Right to Self Defense

Jurisprudence. Philosophy of Law. Uncertainty of Law and Constitutional Government. This book looks at Argument and Program for Certainty in Law: The Status Quo; New Politics; New Constitution; New Laws; Law and Entropy

Jurisprudence. Philosophy of Law. Uncertainty of Law and Constitutional Government. This book looks at Uncertainty and Law: Constitutional Uncertainty; Legal Uncertainty; Individual Rights; Effects of Uncertainty

Jurisprudence. Philosophy of Law. Uncertainty of Law and Constitutional Government. This book looks at Wealth and Law: Minority Rule;Legislation and Revolution; Government by Lawyers; Lawyers and Wealth

Jurisprudence. Philosophy of Law. Uncertainty of Law and Constitutional Government. This book looks at Courts and Law: Original Intent; Judicial Activism; Reserved Rights and Powers; Political Questions; Constitutionalism

Jurisprudence. Philosophy of Law. Uncertainty of Law and Constitutional Government. This book looks at Justice and Law: Law Schools and Students; Lawyers and Judges; Juries and Trials; People and Corporations; Insurance and Property Cases; Constitutional Guarantees; Attorney fees and Corporate Crime

Jurisprudence. Philosophy of Law. Uncertainty of Law and Constitutional Government. This book looks at Character of the State: Individual and State; Existence and Survival of States; The American State; Morals and Law; Morals and Virtue

Jurisprudence. Philosophy of Law. Uncertainty of Law and Constitutional Government. This book looks at History and Law: Jewish, Greek, Roman, English and American Law, the Bill of Rights and Corporate Pewrsonas

Jurisprudence. Philosophy of Law. Uncertainty of Law and Constitutional Government. This book looks at the domain of law: the laws of Faith, Reason, and Observation; Natural Law; Positivism; Realism; Nomocriticism

America's forefathers were trying to create an illuminated society, the template for a spiritually mature society, a country devoted to freedom instead of oppression, where an Enlightened One such as Osho and his sannyasins, or any spiritual movement, could thrive amidst clearly written legal protections. Discover what Osho has in common with John Locke and President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Contract law as applied in the real world and not just in the books. A classic study of the social and economic realities of commercial and trade law, told through cases and rich historical analysis. Comparing law over three distinct historical eras, Friedman shows that contracts law is more contingent and varying than traditional legal analysis suggests. Adds new foreword by Stewart Macaulay.

Renowned socio-legal study of lawyers in solo practice in Chicago during the 1960s, as updated in 1994. Includes new 2011 Foreword by law professor William Gallagher. The book is considered foundational for studies of the legal profession and legal ethics for small-client practice. Carlin exposes the underbelly of practice among solo lawyers and their methods of getting business, in many settings.